The Last Stand was on June 25, 1876. I have read that on June 30, five days later, General Terry returned to his forward supply base and found a message from General Sheridan saying that a Sioux who had returned from the hostile camp report that there were about three thousand warriors there, far more than expected.
This message is the closest thing I have ever read about any attempt to bring a warning message to Terry or Custer. Of course Custer's white and Indian scouts who were with him and didn't need to send any messengers on hazardous trips to reach him told him face-to-face that there were far more warriors ahead than they had ever seen before.
Apparently that did not have the effect on Custer that a message from General Sheridan might have if it had been delivered on time. So that might have started the scriptwriter thinking about an alternate universe in which someone tried to get a warning message to Custer in time.
(02/07/15)
Some people have criticized General Crook for not sending messages to tell Terry, Gibbon, and Custer about his battle on the Rosebud on June 17, 1876 and warn them about the large numbers and fierce fighting spirit of the Sioux.
Since Terry, Gibbon, and Custer had all spent far more time on the plains than Crook, Crook might have believed that warning them how dangerous the Sioux and Cheyenne were would be like a child teaching its grandmother how to suck eggs. Possibly Crook would not imagine they would come up with such a stupid strategy as they did.
The Time Tunnel episode "Massacre" includes a fictional group of troopers from the Third Cavalry sent to deliver a message from General Crook to General Custer. Custer does not heed the message from the conqueror of the Piutes and the Apaches any more than the warnings given him by the time travelers.
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